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Tips on Self-Fueling


NC Bill

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Don't confuse bonding with grounding. The fuel trucks used to do both now they just bond.

 

The reel from my fuel trailer to my exhaust is my bond and the wire to the hangar is my ground.

 

I also contact my nozzle to the fill before I begin pumping and leave it in contact as I pump.

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Carbon fiber is relatively conductive. 178CT had to have a cowling repair because the battery trickle charger cable slipped off of the positive wire and came to rest on the cowling, it smoldered before the epoxy burned off and the cable fell to the ground. FDUSA had that happen on a plane they were working on once too.

 

The exhaust pipe is the only place we can safely clamp to. I suspect that static can discharge through the fuel lines (fuel is a little conductive, but not much) and carbon fiber just fine.

 

Also, tires have carbon in them to encourage discharging the static to the ground.

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Yes, carbon fiber is conductive, but that doesn't tell me anything about the conductivity path from the exhaust pipe to the fuel filler. If the carbon fiber were enough there would be no reason for pass through grounding for the instruments and everything could be grounded to the airframe.

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I have checked continuity through the plane body and it is there. If you want to test this. Take the positive wire on the bottom of the plane for charging or jumping and touch that bare wire against the carbon fiber that is grounded to the engine and watch it turn red and start to burn. Bonding and or grounding to the exhaust pipe does help when fueling up at the tank filler.

 

The bond or ground isn't as good as a direct wire would be, but it works as a static discharge point..

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Yes, carbon fiber is conductive, but that doesn't tell me anything about the conductivity path from the exhaust pipe to the fuel filler. If the carbon fiber were enough there would be no reason for pass through grounding for the instruments and everything could be grounded to the airframe.

 

I said relatively conductive. Static electricity has a very high potential and only needs a tiny amount of conductivity to discharge. The resistance of carbon fiber is high enough to interfere with return electrical paths in any medium and low voltage applications though, and will heat up if you push any more than a few hundred mA, which is why it is not used as a ground path.

 

Carbon fiber is a decent conductor, but it is not an ideal conductor.

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Evidently no one has ever checked to see what the actual situation is. I don't buy the, " It has always been done that way" argument. What is the grounding path to the wing and filler? The wing root and fuse are painted, the fuel tank is isolated by rubber tubing and Hylomar, the lights are directly grounded, the file is held with putty against paint. If there is a ground to the wing it work be through the flap and flaperon controls which have plastic inserts in the control linkages.

So I'll ask the question again. Is there a path from the exhaust to the filler?

This might be a job for those fancy Fluke meters some of you own. So far I don't think anyone knows.

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Evidently no one has ever checked to see what the actual situation is. I don't buy the, " It has always been done that way" argument. What is the grounding path to the wing and filler? The wing root and fuse are painted, the fuel tank is isolated by rubber tubing and Hylomar, the lights are directly grounded, the file is held with putty against paint. If there is a ground to the wing it work be through the flap and flaperon controls which have plastic inserts in the control linkages.

So I'll ask the question again. Is there a path from the exhaust to the filler?

This might be a job for those fancy Fluke meters some of you own. So far I don't think anyone knows.

 

No, it is not in the design to make it directly grounded (like bonded connections). This is why the CT is not allowed to be used in IMC. Composite aircraft used in IMC have to have a conductive copper mesh built into the skin to keep static from arcing around the body of the airframe (metallic aircraft even use bonding straps, there is that much static buildup when flying through the clouds), and provide a lightning path. It's not a serious enough issue for VFR only aircraft to worry about because the carbon fiber is conductive enough to transfer static buildup, and there isn't much buildup in VFR.

 

EDIT: The fuel will conduct any fuel tank static buildup through the fuel lines to the fuel valve and engine. However, this isn't really a factor at all, because the tanks aren't where static builds. The risk of static discharge is from the nozzle to the fuel port. That's semi-grounded through the frame.

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I fuel from five gallon plastic cans certified for gasoline. I make sure when pouring that the nozzle touches the metal tank neck ring, and that I have skin contact with the gas can, the body of the airplane, and the tank neck ring so everything is at the same electrical potential. So far I'm still here.

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Anticept, the CTs have a " rubber" portion of line between the tank and engine, so that theory does not apply. (as per my last post).

I use Andy's fuel system and I am also still here. That is simply anecdotal evidence. I would like to know the reality rather than a bunch of guesses and how it works in other planes. (I don't don't believe the CTs are made with the copper mesh.)

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Anticept, the CTs have a " rubber" portion of line between the tank and engine, so that theory does not apply. (as per my last post).

I use Andy's fuel system and I am also still here. That is simply anecdotal evidence. I would like to know the reality rather than a bunch of guesses and how it works in other planes. (I don't don't believe the CTs are made with the copper mesh.)

 

CTs do not have a mesh. And, I was referring to static being conducted via the fuel itself. It's such a low conductivity though, and honestly, I wouldn't worry about it. All these parts shielding the tank with non-conductive material also means it is very very hard for static to build inside the tank in the first place.

 

Roger also already said that if you check the fuel port and the engine exhaust, there is continuity.

 

Also, I was referring to the fuel itself being used to conduct the static to the engine. Fuel has a high resistance, but it can conduct! Still, I'm not worried about static inside the tank. It's the skin of the airplanes that builds up.

 

Finally, I would argue that it is better to follow the "it's always been this way" until you actually do find empirical evidence that you should do the opposite for something that has had a history of injuries and fires :)

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You're right about the rubber piece of hose in the fuel line at the header tank. The carbon fiber wing spars are touching each other and the fuselage. The carbon fiber makes contact through out the plane.

 

Roger, I am pretty sure that the spars do not touch the fuselage, and are just tied to each other. The pins on the ends of the wiing do touch the fuselage, and the forward pin mounts in the end of the fuel tank. I think any conductivity would be carried through these pins, the flap linkage, and the aileron linkage.

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It's just our definitions of touching that are different.

 

They do touch as they pass through the tunnel and then again when you put the spar pins in place. Plus the two alignment pins. Conductivity is carried through out the entire plane. I used a meter and put a charge down on the cowling and went around the plane. There is conductivity. It doesn't make any real difference where we think things touch. Every thing is all interconnected somewhere in one or multiple points and you only need one point of contact to complete the circuit.

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It's just our definitions of touching that are different.

 

They do touch as they pass through the tunnel and then again when you put the spar pins in place. Plus the two alignment pins. Conductivity is carried through out the entire plane. I used a meter and put a charge down on the cowling and went around the plane. There is conductivity. It doesn't make any real difference where we think things touch. Every thing is all interconnected somewhere in one or multiple points and you only need one point of contact to complete the circuit.

 

Roger, there is no difference in the definition. When the wings are installed on the airplane the spars do not touch the fuselage at any point. They sit inside the hollow tunnel with clearance on all sides, including the main pins which do not touch either. If the spars were touching it would create a wear point which could lead to a failure.

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There are 4 stainless steel pins, two on each wing, that go into the fuselage. The carry through spar is for the wings to keep them straight, while the plane itself hangs on the 4 pins. See here:

 

http://documents.flightdesignusa.com/CTLS%20MM%20rev.4.pdf Page 4-3, Figure 3, for an example. The pins are a couple inches long,

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Tom and Anticept, thanks for the explanation regarding the spars and the rectangular section tunnel that "houses" the spars. Does that mean that the tunnel is not structural? It seems to have very thin sides (at least front, back and bottom), leading me to wonder if it has no structural role in the fuselage (and is only there for cosmetic purposes). Thanks.

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Tom and Anticept, thanks for the explanation regarding the spars and the rectangular section tunnel that "houses" the spars. Does that mean that the tunnel is not structural? It seems to have very thin sides (at least front, back and bottom), leading me to wonder if it has no structural role in the fuselage (and is only there for cosmetic purposes). Thanks.

 

The housing is not structural at all. It is strictly cosmetic.

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Hi Tom,

 

I disagree. The spars do touch especially when you apply 200 in/lbs of torque on the pin retainers. The metal rings inside the spars where the pins go through touch when tightened down.

 

Like I said, it really won't make a difference since the whole aircraft is linked in some way shape or form. Put a power supply on the right wing fuel insert then take a reading on the other wing insert or put the power supply on the exhaust pipe and take a reading on the fuel insert. There is conductivity.

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